BusyCal iOS

Getting Started with BusyCal for iOS

BusyCal is a calendar and to do list manager for iOS that can be used as an alternative to the built-in iOS Calendar and Reminders apps.

BusyCal’s unique and powerful features include customizable calendar views, integrated to dos that display in the calendar and carry forward until completed, support for weather and moon phases, and more.

When you open BusyCal for the first time, you’re presented with the Welcome screen.

After you tap Get Started, you’ll see a series of alerts in which BusyCal requests permission to access Calendars, Reminders, Contacts, Location, and Notifications. (Not all permission alerts appear on all devices.) Tap Allow or OK for each one.

After you grant BusyCal permission to use the various types of iOS data, the app prompts you to add a cloud-based calendar account.

BusyCal can sync with many calendar servers, including iCloud, Google, Office 365, Exchange, OS X Server, and others. To set up an account, tap the Connect button next to an account type, enter your credentials, and tap Add. You can set up additional accounts by tapping Add Another Account; you can also skip that step for now and add more accounts later. For more information, see the help pages on syncing BusyCal for iOS with iCloud, Google Calendar, Exchange, and CalDAV.

BusyCal can sync with the built-in Calendar and Reminders apps on OS X, as well as with the Mac version of BusyCal, but only through a cloud-based service (iCloud, Exchange, Google, or a CalDAV server). BusyCal does not sync with Macs via iTunes.

iCloud, Google, Exchange, etc. — Calendars hosted on a server such as iCloud, Google, Exchange, Fruux, or other CalDAV Server.

Other — Displays birthdays and anniversaries from the iOS Contacts app, plus read-only calendar subscriptions from a WebDAV server, like a holiday calendar.

Calendars with checkmarks are visible in BusyCal. To hide or show a calendar, tap its name. To hide or show all calendars in a given account, tap All account-name (for example, “All iCloud”). To hide or show all calendars in all accounts, tap Hide All Calendars or Show All Calendars at the top of the screen.

To change a calendar’s details, tap the “i” icon to the right of its name in the calendar list.

In the Edit Calendar view that appears, you can:

Rename the calendar

Tap a color to change the color of the calendar (and all its events)

Turn Alarms on or off for this calendar

Turn Notify Of Changes on or off for this calendar; if on, BusyCal displays an alert when items on the calendar are added or changed by someone else

Enable or disable syncing for the calendar, using the Enable Calendar switch

In any view, tap an event to see its details. In Month view, since the display of individual events might be quite small, you can tap a day to see an accordion with all that day’s individual events; tap an event within this accordion to see its details.

Scrolling Views

You can scroll the view in BusyCal by swiping, just as in any other iOS app. Regardless of where you scroll, you can instantly return the view to the current day, week, or month (or, if already in the current time period, highlight today’s date) by tapping the calendar icon in the lower-left corner of the screen showing today’s date.

Day View

To view to earlier or later times in the current day, swipe up or down.

To scroll backward or forward one day at a time, swipe left or right.

Week View

To view to earlier or later times of day, swipe up or down.

To scroll backward or forward to earlier or later days, swipe left or right.

Month View

To scroll backward or forward one week at a time, swipe up or down.

Customizing the Number of Days per Week and Weeks per Month

You can change the number of days shown in Week view (from 2–7 days) by pinching or spreading two fingers, or by tapping Settings > Calendars > Days in Week View and then tapping one of the available options. You can choose a different number of days per week for Portrait and Landscape view—for example, you may want to show a full 7 days on an iPhone when it’s held in Landscape orientation, but only 2 days when held in Portrait orientation.

Likewise, you can change the number of weeks to show in Month view (from 2–8 weeks) by pinching or spreading two fingers, or by tapping Settings > Calendars > Weeks in Month View and then tapping one of the available options. You can choose a different number of weeks per month for Portrait and Landscape view—for example, you may want to show a full 5 weeks on an iPad when it’s held in Portrait orientation, but only 3 weeks when held in Landscape orientation.

While we’re on the subject of customizing the appearance of your calendar, you may have noticed the 10-day weather forecast and moon phases that appear in the calendar. (Weather appears in List, Day, and Month views; Moons appear in List and Month views only.) To enable or disable these settings, tap Settings > Show Weather or Settings > Show Moons, respectively.

Dated To Do — A task with a due date that appears in the calendar and/or To Do List. See To Dos for more information.

Timed To Do — A task with a due date and time that appears in the calendar and/or To Do List. See To Dos for more information.

Undated To Do — A task with no due date that appears only in the To Do List. See To Dos for more information.

Note: BusyCal for Mac supports additional event types, including stickies, journals, and graphics. If you add any such events in BusyCal for Mac, they appear in BusyCal for iOS after syncing. Stickies and journals appear as all-day events on your iOS device.

To create a new event, tap the + (plus) icon in the upper-right corner of BusyCal’s calendar (or To Do List) view. Then tap Event (if it’s not already selected), and fill in the details. You can edit event details in the Event Details view (described just ahead).

BusyCal includes an Event Details view for viewing and editing details of events and to dos, which appears when you create a new event or to do, or when you tap an existing event or to do. To make changes to the event or to do, tap Edit in the upper-right corner of the screen; doing so reveals controls for setting additional details. Tap Done to record your changes. (You can change the priority, calendar, or alarms of an event or to do without first tapping Edit.)

The Event Details view is customizable. You can choose to show just the basics, or add additional fields like tags or a URL. For more information, see Event Details.

In BusyCal, to dos are integrated into your calendar. To dos can be displayed in the calendar on the date they are due or displayed in the To Do List.

To dos come in three flavors—dated, timed, and undated. Dated to dos have a due date and can be displayed in the calendar; timed to dos also have an associated time. Undated to dos do not have a due date or time and can be displayed only in the To Do List.

To Dos in the Calendar

Regardless of your To Do List settings, dated to dos and completed to dos appear in the calendar on the date they are due or completed. If a to do is not completed on its due date, it carries forward each day until completed.

To Do List

To show the To Do List, tap To Do at the bottom of BusyCal’s main screen.

The To Do List can be sorted by Due Date, Priority, Title, Calendar, Tag, or Manually. To change the sort order, tap the current sort order at the top of the screen (such as “By Due Date”), tap Sort By, and then tap the new sort criterion.

To Do Calendars

BusyCal calendars are type-specific. A calendar can contain either events or to dos, but not both. BusyCal indicates a to do calendar by displaying “(To Do Calendar)” next to its name in the Calendars list (in Settings > Calendars).

To create a new to do, tap the + (plus) icon in the upper-right corner of BusyCal’s calendar (or To Do List) view. Then tap To Do, and fill in the details. To make it a dated to do, turn on Due Date and fill in the date; for a timed to do, also turn on Due Time and fill in the time. (To create a repeating to do, tap Repeat in the Event Details view followed by an interval: None, Daily, Weekly, Monthly, or Yearly.) Then tap Done.

If you mark a to do as completed by tapping the “done” checkbox in the calendar, To Do List, or Event Details view, the completed to do appears with a checkmark in front of it on the date that it was completed.

BusyCal can display alarms for events and to dos using iOS Notifications. Or, if you prefer—and you sync the same calendars in both apps—you can leave BusyCal’s alarms turned off and rely instead on notifications from the iOS Calendars app. But note that either app can display alarms only for the calendars it’s configured to sync.

To have BusyCal generate alarms:

In BusyCal, go to Settings > App Icon & Alerts.

Turn on Event Alarms and To Do Alarms.

In the main iOS Settings app, go to Notifications > BusyCal. Turn on all desired options (likely all of them) and tap Banners (the default) or Alerts for the alert style when your iOS device is unlocked.

Still in the main iOS Settings app, go to Notifications > Calendar and turn off Allow Notifications. Repeat with Notifications settings for Reminders.

Note: If you turn off notifications for Reminders, you can still receive location-based alerts in BusyCal, but you must go to Settings > Privacy > Location Services > BusyCal and tap Always (not just While Using the App).

To have the iOS Calendars and Reminders apps generate alarms:

In BusyCal, go to Settings > App Icon & Alerts.

Turn off Event Alarms and To Do Alarms.

In the main iOS Settings app, go to Notifications > BusyCal. Turn off Allow Notifications.

Still in the main iOS Settings app, go to Notifications > Calendar and turn on Allow Notifications, along with all the specific notification types you want. Repeat with Notifications settings for Reminders.

Note: If you have notifications enabled for BusyCal as well as Calendars and/or Reminders, you’ll see two alarms for each event or to do. So it’s best to choose one or the other.

Creating an Alarm

To demonstrate the Alarm function, let’s create a new event and attach an alarm to it.

To create a new event, tap the + (plus) icon in the upper-right corner of BusyCal’s calendar (or To Do List) view and tap Event (if it’s not already selected). Then, in the Event Details view, set the event start time for approximately two minutes from now, and set the alarm to “At start”.

Then wait a minute or two for the alarm to appear. When it does, you can tap Close to dismiss the alarm, snooze it by tapping Snooze 5 Minutes, Snooze 15 Minutes, or Snooze 1 Hour, or open it in BusyCal by tapping Open.

BusyCal can display the birthdays and anniversaries from the iOS Contacts app in your calendar. Go to Settings > Show in Calendar, and turn on “Show Birthdays Calendar” and/or “Show Anniversaries Calendar.”

With these calendars enabled, a Birthdays calendar and an Anniversaries calendar appear under the Other heading in the Calendar List, and any contacts with birthdays or anniversaries in their Contacts records are displayed with special icons in the calendar.

BusyCal supports subscribing to read-only (WebDAV) public calendars like holidays and sports schedules. All-day events on public calendars appear as banners in BusyCal, just like other all-day events.

To subscribe to a public calendar:

Go to Settings > Accounts.

Tap Add Account.

Tap the Connect button next to WebDAV.

Type or paste the URL for the public calendar in the Calendar URL field.

Optionally, tap Refresh to change how often the calendar refreshes, and/or turn off Enable Alarms for this calendar.

Tap Add.

BusyMac provides links to popular public calendars here: Holiday and Sports Calendar Subscriptions. Note that you must copy the URL and paste it into BusyCal; if you simply tap a link on your iOS device, the calendar will be added to Calendar, not to BusyCal.